“Unity task forces,” intended to avoid the divisions that plagued the Democrats in 2016, could offer clues to how a Biden Administration would function.
In North Carolina, Madison Cawthorn capitalized on resentment toward the White House chief of staff to beat Lynda Bennett, Meadows’s pick for his old House seat.
The trail has been changed by the events of America’s long, difficult spring—and the story behind Trump’s campaign comeback rally reflects these changes.
As election experts, and Democrats in Congress, have been saying for weeks, safeguarding our elections this year is a job bigger than any one precinct or state.
Every decision Biden makes for the foreseeable future will be analyzed as either turning toward the left or the center, and his choice of running mate is one of the more visible decisions he will make before Election Day.
The Michigan congressman and Trump critic announced that he will seek the Libertarian Party’s nomination for President at a time when even Joe Biden is having trouble staying in the public eye.
Although nothing about Sanders’s message had changed, when I opened my notebooks from the campaign trail, now two weeks old, they were unrecognizable, missives from a parallel universe.
There was no reason that Wisconsin had to endanger public health by voting on Tuesday. Republican leaders simply decided that it was in their interest for the election to proceed.
With normal life shut down and COVID-19 spreading, many people will have to choose between their health and their democracy. And thousands could be disenfranchised.
If the current situation persists for months, as it’s likely to, no one can really say what it will mean for politicians’ ability to engage with the public.
The epidemic has resurfaced many of the questions about preparedness that dogged Biden from the start of his campaign, and he has been slow to find his footing.
Supporters of Marie Newman, who defeated a longtime incumbent in the Democratic congressional primary, aren’t shying away from intra-Party competition.